Slashdot Mirror


User: professorhojo

professorhojo's activity in the archive.

Stories
0
Comments
120
First seen
Last seen
Profile
(view on slashdot.org)

Comments · 120

  1. whoa! on Photoshop for DNA · · Score: 1

    if this is true then they're probably gonna need this neat photoshop plugin i just found...

    Plugin name: DNA (deoxyribose nucleic acid): "The genetic material of inheritance, undoubtedly has the most well-known molecular structure of all time. This tutorial describes how to make it."

    http://www.nextdesigns.net/modules.php?name=Photos hop_Tutorials&file=dna

  2. it's been 21 days since i checked email... on Email Addiction Runs Rampant · · Score: 1

    it's pretty frightening when you can google up a 12-step recovery program for sex addiction, substitute the word "sex" for "email" and it still kind of works.

    my favorite steps:

    1. Admitted we were powerless over [what ever your affliction] and that our lives were unmanageable

    2. Came to believe that a power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.

    8. Made a list of persons we had harmed and became willing to make amends to them all.

    good god. where to begin?

  3. some resources on Self-wiring Supercomputer · · Score: 5, Informative
    the wikipedia article on FPGA: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FPGA

    great list of resources from WP on FPGA if anyone's interested in reading more:
  4. who's not reading between the lines here? on Funding Promised for Trips to Moon, Mars · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ASA's new administrator, Michael Griffin, and House Majority Leader Tom DeLay said Tuesday the space agency will have the necessary funding to send astronauts back to the moon and to Mars. Delay states "We will provide whatever funding is necessary to get the spotlight off my ethics investigation and possible upcoming criminal proceedings."

  5. burning edge says: on Firefox Deer Park Alpha Available · · Score: 4, Informative

    According to Burning Edge, there are numerous usability regressions since 1.0 on the trunk builds.

    I think they need a lot of time to iron things out and this is one of those things they've decided to prolong the process!

    Since Fx is a hugely successful project that is still unusual in its open-source nature, the fact that more alphas and betas and in-betweens are being released may be a good thing.

  6. hmm on Google Releases Earth to Beta · · Score: 5, Funny

    i know all the words in that title, but i just can't parse that sentence.

  7. Thank GOD. on Texas Wireless Ban Has Failed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Close call. The attempt to forbid cities and towns from offering wireless services was seriously misguided.

    Public wireless is like roads and street lights. Like roads, public wireless access enables economic development. When a road is paved, houses and businesses spring up around it. When an urban area has street lighting, business and civic life continues into the night.

    Most streets aren't toll roads, and street lights don't have a fee per block. These services are generally accepted to provide public benefit above and beyond the revenue they would bring if they relied on fee-for-service funding.

    Networking is in an early stage, like street lights were a long time ago. Cities and towns ought to be able to make their own decisions about what will bring economic development to their area. Each municipality makes its own decisions about roads and public transportation. Similarly, the decision about whether and how to provide wireless services should be a local decision. We don't want to *prevent* cities and towns from choosing to provide wireless as a service that will incent additional economic activity. We don't want to mandate one model, for the whole state, in an early stage of development.

  8. fascinating on Coming Soon, The Google Translator · · Score: 5, Informative

    since the RTFAs lacked any kind of crunchiness, i sourced some great stuff here that does a wonderful job explaining how this system works, and gives the advantages the statistical translation method has over the rules-based approach. as well as the disadvantages.

    fascinating stuff:

    "Currently, most machine translation technology, including consumer-oriented programs such as Systran's Babel Fish, have been "taught" the rules of language, such as verb tenses and when to use parts of speech. Programmers painstakingly hand-build systems based on such rules. "The computer is told, if you see this thing in Russian, replace it with this thing in English," explains Yarowsky.

    "While somewhat effective, such systems are time-consuming to build (consider how long it takes most humans to learn a language and all its rules), and resulting translations are still marred by grammatical and other errors. Those that do work fairly well usually tackle popular Western languages, such as French, German, and Spanish; there are few translation programs developed for other important tongues, such as Chinese, Turkish, or Arabic, let alone for more obscure languages like Tajik.

    "To tackle a broader range of the world's languages, and to improve on the quality of machine translation, Yarowsky and his Hopkins colleagues are developing computer programs that can be trained to figure out any language using statistical analysis, i.e., looking at the probabilities of language patterns. In what's known as automatic knowledge acquisition, the computer could "learn" Serbian well enough to translate future documents or conversation, or at the least pick out pertinent words like "bomb."

    "As Yarowsky explains: "Say you want to teach a computer how to translate Chinese: You give the computer 100,000 sentences in English and the same 100,000 sentences in Chinese and run a program that can figure out which words go to which words. If in 2,000 sentences you have the word Washington, and in about the same number of sentences you have the word Huashengdun, and they occur in the same place in the sentence, these words are likely translations.

    "It's all just observation," Yarowsky adds. "Children do the same thing, but they also do it through visual stimulation and feedback. They see a book and hear the word 'book,' and eventually they learn that it's a book. They see a bird with its wings flapping around and learn that is called a bird. It's the same with machines, only they have much better memories. Computers could remember exactly when and where they saw the words bird and book."

    "So, instead of telling a computer how to do something -- conjugate the verb 'to be' in Spanish, for example (I am = soy) -- researchers give it tens of thousands of examples and program the computer to find repeated patterns that the computer can use to conjugate new verbs. Trained this way, the program could potentially "learn" phrase structure and the rules of translation.

    "As Yarowsky notes in his 100,000-sentence example, one way to accomplish automatic knowledge acquisition is to use bilingual or parallel text. The program "reads" a document in English and then a version in a second language. Such texts used by Hopkins researchers include the Bible, which is available on the Web in more than 60 languages, the Book of Mormon (over 60 languages), and the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights (240 languages).

    "Aiding the computer is the fact that the English version of such texts can be annotated by hand or using another computer program -- essentially marked up to show, for example, that Jesus is a noun and pray is a verb. The translation program-in-training needs such information because it cannot translate future text just by substituting individual words in each language; it must also be able to analyze how sentences work. To do so, the computer program uses pattern recognition templates and other tools to understand sentences on a syntactic level. Simply put, the program is essentially given clues to know what to look for, notes Yarowsky: "It should figure out the subject, figure out the object, and other elements of sentence structure."

  9. good stuff... on Debian Sarge Coming Soon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Releasing Sarge will be hugely cathartic for Debian, it will get a monkey off of their back so they can move forward on the reduced platform list.

    People need to remember that Debian is not trying to be Fedora or Gentoo. There are already numerous distros providing the bleeding edge with various degrees of config assistance/packaging options etc. Debian is offering the "must work" (as opposed to "just work" which seems less mission-critical) alternative, and its useful for someone to perform the heavy testing and fixing they do.

    I am satisfied that the Debian crowd is making moves to keep itself relevant with a new team leader, a new set of targets, and a release in the bag. Having been burned in the past by the "maybe it works" distros in the past, I will be seriously considering their future offerings.

    On a slightly related tangent: just who do those Ubuntu guys think they are? They are releasing a Distro that claims to be Debian compatible, and yet their packages are not 3.5 years old. What's worse, they seem to be a popular distro. If this doesn't stop, we might have to cooperate with someone else in the Debian space! We might end up like (gasp!) Fedora, and have to deal with multiple repositories in a Bazaar-like fashion instead of doing things in the Cathedral-like fashion that we are accustomed to. Where will it all end?

  10. Ahh.. jumping puzzles... on A Gamer's Manifesto · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Ah: jumping puzzles.

    The most annoying part of FPS games, which require you to take a break from gleefully blowing the crap out of your enemies to make meticulously-timed jumps across platforms, like you've suddenly turned into Mario or something.

    Personally, my biggest pet peeve is that the AI in strategy games hasn't advanced significantly in the past 10 or so years. More annoyingly, playing "harder" settings on these games doesn't change anything about the AI, it just lets the computer "cheat" to produce things quicker than you do.

  11. dupe? on iPod to Podcast Sirius Satellite Radio Content? · · Score: 2, Funny
  12. asdf on Nothing of .Net in Longhorn? · · Score: 4, Informative

    from microsoft's official page on preparing for longhorn, i quote: "Preparing for Longhorn - Longhorn builds on existing security and Microsoft .NET Framework knowledge. Use the resources on this page to understand why it is important to adopt these concepts today, and discover how they will apply to Longhorn tomorrow."

    the key here is the word knowledge: "longhorn builds on ...NET framework knowledge"

    which could possibly be construed differently than "longhorn builds on ...NET framework".

    who knows? maybe i'm reading too much into it..

  13. for those too lazy to RTFA on Google AdSense Meta Refresh Hijacked · · Score: 4, Informative

    for those too lazy to RTFA, it appears google adsense wasn't exactly 'hijacked', but was victim of its own slightly buggy (at the moment) trust algorithms. from the comments there, it's apparantly only a real hijack if visitors get something other than a 301 as well in an attempt to divert their visit. here's what the 'hijacker' himself had to say on jensense.

    "I want to thank JenSense and others for posting this thread. I just got off the phone with two different tech writers explaining why I would have a meta redirect on my site. It isn't an attempt to profit from either Google's page rank or some cloaked affiliate link. I am no hijacker. In fact, I'm not sure how I could in any way benefit from this link. The simple fact is this: I write and syndicate articles all over the web. I used to put into those articles direct links to sites I was talking about. A couple years ago I had a problem when I had written and syndicated several articles about GoTo.com when they changed their name to Overture. There were dozens of websites to notify and ask them to update the links in my articles. So I decided to begin using meta refresh redirects rather than listing the URL's directly. I can then keep the links current in all the articles I write. Hopefully Google will look at this and decide to make some changes so this won't occur. It's hard to believe I got a number 1 listing without trying."

  14. Go on Keep Fit Program For The Brain · · Score: 4, Informative

    i recommend a game of "Go" a day

    "It's official: playing go really does keep your mind sharp. Researchers have just released a comprehensive study of the benefits of challenging intellectual activity among the elderly and found that exercising the mind through board games, social activities and education offers powerful protection against mental deterioration and disease.

    'Those who played board games had a 74 percent lower risk and those who played an instrument had a 69 percent lower risk. Doing crossword puzzles cut the risk by 38 percent,' reported Shankar Vedantam in the June 19 Washington Post. The report found that seniors who regularly engaged in mentally challenging pastimes reduced their chances of developing Alzheimer's disease and other dementias by as much as 75 percent, compared with those who didn't exercise their minds.
    "

    More info on Go, the game that exercises both sides of your brain!

  15. viva la france on Decriminalizing File Swapping · · Score: 4, Funny

    from what i read, the French magistrates union has begun to openly advocate decriminalizing online trading in copyrighted works for personal use.

    so what's personal use? less than 5 movies?

    does that mean if i'm caught with more than 5 movies i'm a dealer?

    can i get an exemption for medical use?

  16. a few thoughts... on Motivations for Corporate Blogging · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just a few thoughts...

    As a corporate marketing tactic, in my (limited) experience, it only works only if the blog author has talent.

    You need someone on your team who can write in a genuinely engaging voice, who can be intimate without telling you what he or she had for breakfast, and who knows the line between openness and damaging innuendo.

    Also: blogging's strength is of course, ultimately, its biggest weakness when you view it from a corporation's point of view. You can budget and plan for it, but you can't forecast the results, which is enough to make the suits very nervous.

  17. a tip on Blank Keyboard · · Score: 4, Funny

    here's a tip that can save you around 80 bucks:

    BUY PRIMER -- take off cap -- spray.

  18. i could be wrong... on PalmOne to become Palm Again; PalmSource & Linux · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    but i believe this is the most pointless article on slashdot that i've seen for a while. how much text do you really need to say that a company changed its name?

  19. in other news... on Voyager 1 Crosses The Termination Shock · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...voyager fans, unsure what "termination shock" exactly means, start raising donations "just in case".

  20. cory said it well on Publishers Protest Google Library Project · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My favorite take on the "loss of sales" argument comes from Cory Doctorow of BoingBoing on March 3, 2005:

    "When reporters ask me why I give away the full text of my novels online, for free, the day they're available in shops, I tell 'em: "It's about word of mouth. My readers have large social circles of friends whom they never see face to face. Books like Sisters of Ya Ya Sisterhoood became a success because one friend went to another friend and handed her a copy of the book, saying, 'You must read this, it changed my life.' I want to give my readers the same ability, so I have to give them a form of the book that they can 'hand' to their friends over the Internet. Even if it displaces some sales, the most valuable thing an author can get is a personal recommendation, it's the thing that is most likely to sell more copies of my books."

    Linky: http://www.boingboing.net/2005/03/03/wordofmouth_i s_why_a.html

  21. and now... on Classic Cartoons Marred by Digital Restoration · · Score: 5, Informative


    here's a non-registration-required before-and-after example.

  22. diet can affect gender... on Engineers Have More Sons, Nurses More Daughters · · Score: 5, Funny

    Studies have shown that a mother-to-be's diet high in calcium and magnesium including milk, beans, cereals, cheese and nuts may favor a baby girl, whereas a diet high in pizza and coke apparantly favors the conception of a baby boy.

  23. True, but... on Massachusetts Adopting 'Open Format' Software · · Score: 4, Insightful

    >On the other hand, XML and other TLAs don't
    >always mean free or open formats.

    This is true, but XML documents themselves are also considerably more open than their binary counterparts. Anyone can parse a well-formed XML document, and validate it if a DTD is provided. While companies may still create XML that behaves in a specific way bound to their application, the data in the XML document is available to any application. While developers could create obfuscated DTDs or encrypt their data in a proprietary manner, they would lose most of the benefits of using XML. XML doesn't bar the creation of proprietary formats, but its openness is one of its greatest advantages.

  24. Re:sync with iPod? on Thunderbird 1.0 RC1 Released · · Score: 1

    a what now? ;-)

  25. sync with iPod? on Thunderbird 1.0 RC1 Released · · Score: 1

    that would be a killer feature.

    if i could do that, i would be over on thunderbird in a new york second.

    does this exist? :-)